Head coaches through the 2009 season ...
1) Bill Parcells - 1986 and 1990 New York Giants, 1996 New England Patriots.
2) Mike Holmgren - 1996 and 1997 Green Bay Packers, 2005 Seattle Seahawks.
3) Dan Reeves - 1987, 1989, and 1990 Denver Broncos, 1999 Atlanta Falcons.
The 2003 Pro Bowl head coaches were Jeff Fisher of the Titans (AFC) and Andy Reid of the Eagles (NFC). The AFC won the game 45-20.
There have been two coaches that have coached both an AFC and a NFC team in the Super Bowl, Don Shula and Bill Parcels. Neither has won a Super Bowl in each division. Don Shula: 2-3 record in the Super Bowl NFC: Baltimore Colts, Super Bowl III AFC: Miami Dolphins, SuperBowls VI, VII, VIII, XVII Bill Parcels: 2-1 record in the Super Bowl NFC: New York Giants, Super Bowls XXI, XXV AFC: New England Patriots, Super Bowl XXXI
The AFC Champion, the Colts and the NFC Champion, the Saints:) It will be a great game...
In 2008, the Miami Dolphins (11-5) won the AFC East Division.
They had the best record in the NFL, but the Steelres won the AFC championship in 2010-11.
No. The superbowl has always been the NFC champion vs the AFC champion. The Raiders and the Patriots are both in the AFC, therefore it is not possible for them to play in the superbowl
Tha Colts are from the AFC and The Saints are from the NFC. Lez Sez Le Bon Temps Roulet!! Geaux Saints!!
steelers defence playbook... deff not worth it for me
That would be in 1971 (Super Bowl V) when the Baltimore Colts of the AFC defeated the Dallas Cowboys of the NFC 16-13. The previous four Super Bowls were played between the NFL champion and the AFL champion.
Two teams, the AFC Conference Champion and the NFC Conference Champion, go to the Super Bowl each season.
The American Football Conference, which was created after the 1970 merger of the National Football League and the American Football League. The AFC consists of the 10 AFL teams, plus three longtime NFL teams (the Browns, the Colts and the Steelers) that moved there. The annual Super Bowl title is determined in a contest between the AFC champion and the NFC champion.
Marv Levy who coached the Bills between 1986-1997. In those 12 seasons the Bills finished first in the AFC East 7 times, played in 5 AFC Championship games, and played in 4 Super Bowls.